Thursday, August 09, 2018

Alex Jones and the Internet

A long list of Internet giants suddenly banned Alex Jones and his InfoWars site. I'll state up front that the few times I've run across Alex Jones's conspiracy theories, they've left me feeling, in the words of Captain Jack Sparrow, sullied and unusual. Regardless there are several reasons why this was a mistake.

First is the obvious one - there are much worse sites out there that have not been banned. The reasons for the ban are too vague to be useful. For example, Louis Farakan's anti-Semitic diatribes are still out there.

This leads into the second reason - the tech giants are simply not equipped to decide what should and should not be allowed. They are staffed with far-left ideologues and only given vague guidelines instead of hard rules. It comes across more as censorship than enforcement of values.

Suppressing Jones has solidified support for him from the Right (including this post) because, given the vague reasons given, the see themselves or sites they support as being next. There have been calls for government control of the Internet giants because if this. My libertarian instincts say that this would be bad so let's not see actions that push the issue.

Finally, the effort could very well backfire. When you suppress a conspiracy theorist, he claims that you are trying to hide the truth. It gives him credibility that he should not have. Jones claims that 4.5 million people have signed up for his email newsletter since the ban. Multitudes of people who couldn't care less about Alex Jones are now wondering what he did to get banned. Some of them will believe his ravings. That's the very opposite of what the Internet giants wanted.

So, how can so many people who are so smart do something so dumb?

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